The 2013 Nevada Legislature will consider a proposal to
adopt legal ways to reduce the illegal immigration population in
Nevada and another to let election workers request photo
identification before voters can cast ballots.
Assemblyman Ira Hansen, R-Sparks, who submitted the bill draft
requests that were released Monday, doubts he can pass his bill
dealing with illegal immigration because of Democratic opposition.
He introduced a version of the bill in 2011, but it was rejected.
After the U.S. Supreme Court's decision last week rejecting part
of Arizona's immigration law, Hansen said he asked the legislative
attorney to draft a bill that included parts that were found
constitutional.
That is the clause that allows police to request identification
of people they suspect are in the country illegally after they have
stopped their vehicles for another violation.
"If they cannot produce valid identification, why are they
driving?" Hansen asked. "I want laws encouraging as many options to
keep illegal aliens out of Nevada as possible. The real reason we
need these laws is the federal government is not doing its job."
But he acknowledge that if the state passes such a law, then it
would remain U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement's
responsibility to pick up any illegal aliens whom Nevada police
detain. They could decide just to let them go, he added.
He said Nevada has a lot of unauthorized residents, and they are
driving down the pay of legal workers because they will work for
less pay. He said employers should be disciplined for hiring people
in the country illegally.
"I am doing this to honor a campaign promise," Hansen said. "If
it were on the ballot, it would win overwhelmingly and over half the
Hispanics would vote for it."
Hansen also does not predict success for his photo ID requirement
for voters. But the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an
Arizona photo ID law in April, and the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an
Indiana voter ID law in 2008.
While some people may contend the photo requirement is racist and
an attempt to block minority voting, Hansen said his goal is to
prevent fraudulent voting by anyone.
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News Column
Nevada Proposals Target Immigration, Voter ID
July 5, 2012
Ed Vogel
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Source: (C) 2012 The Las Vegas Review-Journal. via ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved
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